The Miter and the Mentor
(A Personal Eulogy for My Father in Christ, Bishop Jerome Dhas - Rev. Robert John Kennedy)
The halls of Loyola taught me how to read
The cadence of a line, the weight of light;
But you, my Bishop, taught me how to bleed
For a fledgling flock in the watch-fires of the night.
I came to you with a scholar’s restless mind,
With Horace and with Hopkins on my tongue;
But in your Salesian heart, I came to find
The sturdier prose to which a priest is hung.
But you, my Bishop, taught me how to bleed
For a fledgling flock in the watch-fires of the night.
I came to you with a scholar’s restless mind,
With Horace and with Hopkins on my tongue;
But in your Salesian heart, I came to find
The sturdier prose to which a priest is hung.
I remember the "Yes" that built the stone—
The birth of Kuzhithurai from the sea.
You did not claim a kingdom or a throne,
But carved a home for men like you and me.
How many times, in the quiet of the room,
Did your "kindness" (that old Salesian art)
Dispel the shadows of a gathering gloom
And stitch the fraying edges of my heart?
You were the architect of more than walls;
You were the architect of us, your sons.
And when the long, slow, silent shadow falls,
The race is finished, and the course is run.
I watched the tremor take the steady hand
That once had laid the chrism on my brow;
I saw the silence sweep across the land,
A Master-work complete, and silent now.
You were the architect of us, your sons.
And when the long, slow, silent shadow falls,
The race is finished, and the course is run.
I watched the tremor take the steady hand
That once had laid the chrism on my brow;
I saw the silence sweep across the land,
A Master-work complete, and silent now.
Today, the March winds carry salt and prayer,
From the Citadel down to the southern shore;
The scent of incense lingers in the air,
But your gentle footstep sounds upon the floor
No more. Yet in every verse I write,
And every broken bread I hold on high,
I see your face—a beacon in the night,
A shepherd’s star against a Tamil sky.
From the Citadel down to the southern shore;
The scent of incense lingers in the air,
But your gentle footstep sounds upon the floor
No more. Yet in every verse I write,
And every broken bread I hold on high,
I see your face—a beacon in the night,
A shepherd’s star against a Tamil sky.
Sleep now, my Father.
Let the bells ring out
The Annunciation of your final peace.
Beyond the reach of tremor, pain, or doubt,
The Shepherd rests; the labors find release.
Let the bells ring out
The Annunciation of your final peace.
Beyond the reach of tremor, pain, or doubt,
The Shepherd rests; the labors find release.
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